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Showing posts from January, 2025

The Rise of Erik Sørensen: A New Spy Hero for the Digital Age

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In the ever-evolving world of espionage fiction, a new figure has emerged—one who blends classic tradecraft with cutting-edge cyber expertise. Erik Sørensen, a Danish cybersecurity specialist turned reluctant intelligence operative, brings a fresh, cerebral edge to the genre. His missions take him deep into the murky intersections of AI warfare, global surveillance, and shifting geopolitical alliances. With The Aurora Code , Dome of Deception , and The Kowloon Protocols , Sørensen’s journey unfolds against a backdrop of espionage, betrayal, and high-stakes cyber conflict. Each novel explores a different frontier of intelligence warfare, painting a chillingly plausible picture of the world’s next great power struggle. The Aurora Code: A Global Race for AI Supremacy It begins with a simple assignment—too simple. When Erik is tasked with investigating irregularities in the undersea cables linking Greenland to North America, he uncovers something far more dangerous: The Aurora Code—an encr...

Angels of Anglia

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Angels of Anglia ... a work currently on the stocks The Angels of Anglia: A Work in Progress History turns on quiet moments. In the summer of 589, the future Pope Gregory the Great walked through a Roman slave market and saw a group of fair-haired boys for sale—Angles, he was told. “Not Angles, but angels,” he is said to have remarked. That moment, recorded by the Venerable Bede, would set in motion a transformation of a whole people. The Angels of Anglia is the story of those boys. Wulfstan, proud and sharp-eyed, Béon, sturdy and defiant, and their companions, torn from their homeland and thrust into the intellectual and spiritual world of a Roman monastery  where they make friends friends with Luca and other young monks  under the guidance of Abbot Gregory (soon to become Pope) and Augustine. They are bought as slaves but shaped into scholars, monks, and, ultimately, missionaries to their own people. This is a novel of faith and displacement, of identity lost and remade. I...